4.5 Article

Autoimmune Disease-Associated Haplotypes of BLK Exhibit Lowered Thresholds for B Cell Activation and Expansion of Ig Class-Switched B Cells

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ARTHRITIS & RHEUMATOLOGY
卷 67, 期 11, 页码 2866-2876

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/art.39301

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资金

  1. Eileen Ludwig Greenland Foundation
  2. Lauri Strauss Leukemia Foundation, through Caryl Rubenfeld of the Muriel Fusfeld Foundation
  3. Janssen Pharmaceuticals

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Objective. B lymphoid kinase (BLK) is associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and several other B cell-associated autoimmune disorders. BLK risk variants are consistently associated with reduced BLK expression, but the mechanisms by which reduced expression alters human B cell function to confer autoimmune disease susceptibility are unknown. This study was undertaken to characterize the BLK risk haplotype and to determine associated B cell functional phenotypes involved in autoimmunity. Methods. The BLK risk haplotype association with RA (determined using whole-genome sequencing data) was confirmed in 2,526 RA cases and 2,134 controls. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) from RA patients, healthy adults, and umbilical cord blood were used to study B cell functional phenotypes associated with the BLK risk genotype. Association of the BLK haplotype with B cell phenotypes was analyzed using cell culture and flow cytometry. Results. Two insertion/deletions were found on the RA risk haplotype in BLK, and the reduction in BLK expression associated with the risk haplotype was confirmed in primary B lymphocytes. Carriers of the RA-associated haplotype had evidence of lower basal B cell receptor (BCR) signaling activity, yet their B cells were hyperactivatable, with enhanced up-regulation of CD86 after BCR crosslinking and greater T cell stimulatory capacity. The number of isotype-switched memory B cells was also significantly increased in subjects carrying the risk haplotype. Conclusion. A major mechanism underlying the BLK association with autoimmune disease involves lowered thresholds for BCR signaling, enhanced B cell-T cell interactions, and altered patterns of isotype switching.

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